adding carbon to resin tank?

I just talked with someone who recommended adding 2 inches of granular activated carbon to the resin tank of a water softener to remove the chlorine from the water during the softening process (I am on well water but he still recommended adding it). This would remove the need for a whole house inline water filter. The activated carbon would be backwashed at the same time as the resin and he said that the carbon and the resin would need to be replaced every 10 years.

I have never heard this recommendation before, nor have I found any info on on the Internet. Any opinions on this?

What is the rest of your water like?
Why do you need the carbon?
While I might understand it for city water with the chlorine, well water either has iron or smell... and both of those shorten the life of carbon faster than chlorine does..

Oh and forgot to add,,,
Flow rates of the two are different.
Resin has say a flow rate of 6gpm per cubic foot and a back wash rate of 3gpm while carbon has 3gpm for iron and h2s and 6gpm for chlorine per cubic foot and back wash of 4gpm.

If you are adding a few inches I my self do not think that it is going to do much in the way of removing any thing from the water or at least any thing that it should be removing.

The guy wants 600 bucks for a used clack ws1 1.5 cu ft 64,000 from a model home he said maybe regenned once with 300 extra for installation. Should I be concerned. IS THIS A GOOD PRICE?

I have H2S2, 10 OR 11 HARDNESS, Iron and or iron bacteria. I was looking at installing the inline erosion chlorine pellet later but I was looking for an alternative to the expensive mixing tank. Can I just use like a pressure tank my well uses for a retention tank or even a heavy duty plastic barrel? Also what happens if i dont use a carbon filter to remove the chlorine i added? I have an ro???

Well here is the price I got for a new ws-1. The same setup as above but 48k. Maybe I was wrong above he said something about 48-64 depending on size of tank or something. Anyway The cost I was quoted would be $950.00 ifI install it. $1500.00 if they install it. I think people in houston just pay and get whatever. My neighbor spent 3500 on their kinetico. I just want to make sure I am getting a good quality product and doing it right.

I hear getting your moneys worth....... Now if you where up around the Dallas area there is a friend that has just hard water and nothing else in the water.... but you are not and I am in Alaska and know little about your water..
Dealers of the brands have the retail price set by head office most of the time... maybe some room but mostly set by corp...
Then there are the cheap ones at the box stores.... replace every so many years...
550 to install just sounds high....... but as I said,,, I don't know what your market will bear in the way of price... nor do I know the hourly rates there.

I like doing things one step at a time.. the iron and hardness might ,,, might be remove just with the softener... cold water here in Alaska where I am lets that happen 95% of the time..
And there are a few softeners that take out the egg smell.......... they should not, but yet they do.

Thanks for the advice. So if I have iron bacteria you think the water softener will help reduce it making eveything orange? toilet bathtub etc. I have a dishwasher and new fridge I am waiting to hookup. Do u think ultmitely i need the chlorinator and storage tank?

Going on what you have been saying,,,, I kinda wounder about the iron bacteria... remember that at any given time that there are any number of items in the air that is with in the house that might get some thing started in standing water..
If you use some thing like iron out or a resin cleaner every few months that most likely will keep the resin bed clean.

Remember I am kinda fishing here,,, I am in Alaska and do not have a full understanding of your water... here I do.. but your water temp and chem is likely a bit different than here.